The Phnom Penh Post

Tibet’s only football club folds over altitude row

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TIBET’S first and only profession­al football team has become the latest in a string of Chinese clubs to fold, following a row over hosting matches in one of the highest cities in the world.

Lhasa Chengtou played only two games in the Tibetan capital – which sits at an oxygen-sucking altitude of 3,650m – and on both occasions the referee had to suspend play every 15 minutes to let the players breathe bottled oxygen, reported the staterun Xinhua News Agency.

The demise of the club, just three years after it was founded, is a blow to the ruling Communist Party’s hopes of having a team in the profession­al leagues to make Tibetans feel more integrated into China.

Lhasa Chengtou finished last season 26th of 32 teams in China’s third division and had been playing their home matches thousands of kilometres away.

“As a window to show Tibetan football to the world, we’ve been coordinati­ng to host games in Tibet, but in vain,” the club said in a statement on the Twitter-like Weibo to its 2,500 followers, announcing its closure.

The team has been training and hosting matches in other parts of China and was desperate to get back to Tibet, but the Chinese Football Associatio­n (CFA) reportedly would not sanction games at high altitude over concerns for player safety.

There were claims that during one match in Lhasa, six players from visiting Shenzhen Pengcheng had to be stretchere­d off with altitude sickness. That was denied by Tibetan police.

Xinhua said “all of the available pitches are over 3,000m above sea level” in Tibet.

The club said t he ot her reason for its dissolutio­n were CFA rules banning corporate names. The team was also known as Lhasa Urban Constructi­on Investment, af ter a major state-owned company in Tibet.

Last week, Lhasa Chengtou said it was letting all its coaches, players and staff go.

Since the club was establishe­d, the team played only five matches in Tibet and instead staged games last year in Deyang, Sichuan province, more than 2,400km from Lhasa, reported the state-owned Global Times.

The fate of the club’s youth players was unclear, but the Global Times said last week that more than 70 youngsters aged 13 to 16 – all Tibetan – were training in Lhasa despite the punishing conditions and the team’s imminent demise.

Although Lhasa Chengtou were only formed in 2017, initia lly in t he amateur leag ue, footba ll has a long histor y in Tibet af ter it arrived in t he remote region wit h t he British army at the beginning of t he 20t h centur y.

Lhasa Chengtou are the 17th club to depart Chinese profession­al football this year, said Global Times said, a trend that is underminin­g China’s efforts to become a superpower in the sport.

The financial problems of cash-strapped clubs have been exacerbate­d by the coronaviru­s, which has indefinite­ly delayed the Chinese football season.

 ??  ?? Tibet’s Lhasa Chengtou (in blue) played only two matches in the capital city before playing at 3,650m proved to be too much.
Tibet’s Lhasa Chengtou (in blue) played only two matches in the capital city before playing at 3,650m proved to be too much.

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